Heart muscle is shaped like a spiral, a mystery that has eluded scientists since 1669. New research has recreated the structure.
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When your passion becomes your day job, sometimes the day job becomes a chore.
The “first-of-its-kind” archeological find is being reburied despite the fact that researchers haven’t finished studying it.
The majority of people in every country support action on climate, but the public consistently underestimates this share.
Israel looks to deploy its “Iron Beam” air-defense system within the year.
Lasers, mirrors, and computational advances can all work together to push ground-based astronomy past the limits of our atmosphere.
There’s never been a better time to implement empathy training.
Financial illiteracy can become a significant problem. But it’s a problem with a clear solution.
When maps meet stamps, you get a love child called “cartophilately.”
The transformational change driven by AI will elevate neurodiversity inclusion as an organizational asset, argues Maureen Dunne.
Science is for everyone, even those possessing strongly held beliefs that seem to conflict with the best available evidence.
We often laugh at inappropriate things, but not when we are emotionally invested. Laughter cannot be serious. So, can we ever laugh at death?
An innovation’s value is found between the technophile’s promises and the Luddite’s doomsday scenarios.
Its apples taste bad, but institutions all over the world want a descendant or clone of the tree, anyway.
Some physicists are besot with the multiverse, but if we can’t detect these other universes, how seriously should we take them?
Flexible organic circuits might someday hook right into your head.
The history of money is a history of convenience, and spending has never been easier than it is today.
When the Universe was first born, the ingredients necessary for life were nowhere to be found. Only our “lucky stars” enabled our existence.
Why would the Earth suddenly start vomiting forth huge quantities of mud?
Some 13.8 billion years ago, the Universe became hot, dense, and filled with high-energy quanta all at once. Here’s what it was like.
We don’t understand why loneliness is bad for us if all we can say is that it hurts.
“At that time, it was just a wild idea, […] that instead of just a loss of consciousness, anesthetics may do something to the brain that actually turns pain off.”
New tech is a double-edged sword. Integration can be expensive and perilous: Mess up the adoption and jobs are on the line.
On New Year’s Eve 1899, the captain of this Pacific steamliner sailed into history. Or did he?
Studying neuroscience through art.
What do you call it when the Earth shakes for three decades?
Like humans, stars die. The James Webb Space Telescope’s early images already give us a lot of information about how this happens.
Your mentors made time for you. Now, go and make time for others.
Immersive learning creates an interactive environment in which learners have the power to customize their experience.
It didn’t look like anything I’d seen before, but I’d be a great fool to consider “aliens” as a reasonable possibility.